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'''John Vincent Atanasoff''' (]: Джон Винсент Атанасов, ''Dzhon Vinsent Atanasov'') (],] – ],]) was an ] ]. The 1973 decision of the patent suit '']'' named him the inventor of the first automatic electronic digital ], a special-purpose machine that has come to be called the ]. '''John Vincent Atanasoff''' (]: Джон Винсент Атанасов, ''Dzhon Vinsent Atanasov'') (],] – ],]) was an ] ] of ] ancestry. The 1973 decision of the patent suit '']'' named him the inventor of the first automatic electronic digital ], a special-purpose machine that has come to be called the ].


==Early life and education== ==Early life and education==

Revision as of 02:57, 15 December 2007

John Vincent Atanasoff
File:John Atanasoff.gifAtanasoff designed and built the first electronic, digital computer (non-programmable)
Born(1903-10-04)October 4, 1903
Hamilton, New York
DiedJune 15, 1995(1995-06-15) (aged 91)
Frederick, Maryland

John Vincent Atanasoff (Bulgarian: Джон Винсент Атанасов, Dzhon Vinsent Atanasov) (October 4,1903June 15,1995) was an American physicist of Bulgarian ancestry. The 1973 decision of the patent suit Honeywell v. Sperry Rand named him the inventor of the first automatic electronic digital computer, a special-purpose machine that has come to be called the Atanasoff–Berry Computer.

Early life and education

John Atanasoff (a-ta-NA-soff) was born in Hamilton, New York to an electrical engineer and a school teacher. His mother Iva Lucena Purdy was a teacher of mathematics. His father Ivan Atanasoff was born in 1876 in the village of Boyadzhik, Yambol district, Bulgaria just before his own parents died in the April Uprising. In 1889, Ivan Atanasoff emigrated to the United States with his uncle.

Atanasoff was raised by his parents in Brewster, Florida. At the age of nine he learned to use a slide rule, followed shortly by the study of logarithms, and subsequently completed high school at Mulberry High School in two years. In 1925, Atanasoff received his Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from the University of Florida, graduating with straight A's.

He continued his education at Iowa State College and in 1926 earned a master's degree in mathematics. He completed his formal education in 1930 by earning a Ph.D. in theoretical physics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with his thesis, The Dielectric Constant of Helium. Upon completion of his doctorate, Atanasoff accepted an assistant professorship at Iowa State College in mathematics and physics.

Computer development

Partly due to the drudgery of using the mechanical Monroe calculator, which was the best tool available to him while he was writing his doctoral thesis, Atanasoff began to search for faster methods. At Iowa State, Atanasoff researched the use of slaved Monroe calculators and IBM tabulators for scientific problems. In 1936 he invented an analog calculator for analyzing surface geometry. The fine mechanical tolerance required for good accuracy pushed him to consider digital solutions.

The Atanasoff–Berry Computer (ABC) was conceived by the professor in a flash of insight during the winter of 1937–38 after a drive to Rock Island, IL. With a grant of $650 received in September 1939 and the assistance of his graduate student Clifford Berry, the ABC was prototyped by November of that year.

The key ideas employed in the ABC included binary math and Boolean logic to solve up to 29 simultaneous linear equations. The ABC had no central processing unit (CPU), but was designed as an electronic device with vacuum tubes for speed. It also used separate regenerative capacitor memory, a process still used today in DRAM memory.

Intellectual property entanglement

Atanasoff meets Mauchly

John Atanasoff met John Mauchly at the December 1940 meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Philadelphia, where Mauchly was demonstrating his "harmonic analyzer", an analog calculator for analysis of weather data. Atanasoff told Mauchly about his new digital device and invited him to see it. Also during the Philadelphia trip, Atanasoff and Berry visited the patent office in Washington, where their research assured them that their concepts were new. A January 15 1941 story in the Des Moines Register announced the ABC as "an electrical computing machine" with more than 300 vacuum tubes that would "compute complicated algebraic equations".

In June 1941 Mauchly visited Atanasoff in Ames, Iowa to see the ABC. During his four day visit as Atanasoff's houseguest, Mauchly thoroughly discussed the prototype ABC, examined it, and reviewed Atanasoff's design manuscript in detail. Up to this time Mauchly had not proposed a digital computer. In September 1942 Atanasoff left Iowa State for a wartime assignment as Chief of the Acoustic Division with the Naval Ordnance Laboratory (NOL) in Washington D.C. He entrusted his patent application for the ABC to Iowa State College administrators. It was never filed.

Mauchly visited Atanasoff multiple times in Washington during 1943 and discussed Atanasoff's computing theories, but did not mention that he was working on a computer project himself until early 1944. (Mollenhoff, p. 62–66). John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert's construction of ENIAC, the first general purpose electronic computer, during 1943–46 was to lead to a legal dispute two decades later over who was the actual inventor of the computer.

By 1945 the US Navy, too, had decided to build a large scale computer, on the advice of John von Neumann. Atanasoff was put in charge of the project, and he asked Mauchly to help with job descriptions for the necessary staff. However, Atanasoff was also given the responsibility for designing acoustic systems for monitoring atomic bomb tests. That job was made the priority, and by the time he returned from the testing at Bikini Atoll in July of 1946, the NOL computer project was shut down due to lack of progress, again on the advice of von Neumann.

Patent disputed

For a more detailed account, see Honeywell v. Sperry Rand.

Mauchly and Eckert applied for a patent on a "General-Purpose Electronic Computer" in 1947, which was finally granted in 1964. The rights to the patent had been sold in 1951 to Remington Rand (to become Sperry Rand); that company created a subsidiary (Illinois Scientific Developments) to start demanding royalty payments from other equipment manufacturers in the electronic data processing industry in the 1960s.

The dispute over patent royalties eventually resulted in a lawsuit filed on May 26, 1967 by Honeywell Inc. against Sperry Rand in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis, Minnesota challenging the validity of the ENIAC patent. The trial, one of the longest and most expensive in the federal courts to that time, began on June 1 1971, lasted until March 13, 1972, had 77 witnesses, plus 80 depositions and 30,000 exhibits. Atanasoff's machine was introduced as prior art.

The case was legally resolved on Friday, October 19, 1973, when U.S. District Judge Earl R. Larson held the patent invalid, ruling that the ENIAC derived many basic ideas from the Atanasoff-Berry Computer. Judge Larson explicitly stated, "Eckert and Mauchly did not themselves first invent the automatic electronic digital computer, but instead derived that subject matter from one Dr. John Vincent Atanasoff".

Sperry declined to appeal the decision in Honeywell v. Sperry Rand, but it received little publicity at the time, perhaps because it was overshadowed by the Watergate era "Saturday Night Massacre" firing of special prosecutor Archibald Cox by President Richard Nixon the next day. While legally vindicated, Atanasoff's victory was incomplete as the ENIAC, rather than the ABC, continued to be widely regarded as the first computer.

Postwar life

Following World War II Atanasoff remained with the government and developed specialized seismographs and microbarographs for long-range explosive detection. In 1952 he founded and led the Ordnance Engineering Corporation. In 1956 he sold his company to Aerojet General Corporation and became its Atlantic Division president. The ABC computer had become just a memory. It was not until 1954 that he first heard rumors that some of his ideas may have been 'borrowed'. (The ENIAC general patent had been applied for in 1947 but was not granted until 1964.)

In 1961 Atanasoff started another company, Cybernetics Incorporated. He was only gradually drawn into the legal disputes being contested by the fast growing computer companies. Following the resolution of the patent case Atanasoff was warmly honored by Iowa State College, which had since become Iowa State University, and more awards followed. He retired in Maryland and died in 1995. John Mauchly, Presper Eckert, and their families never admitted any improper conduct.

Honors and distinctions

In 1981, he received the Computer Pioneer Medal from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Atanasoff Hall, a computer science building on the Iowa State campus, is named after him. Iowa State also named its implementation of MIT's Project Athena, 'Project Vincent'.

In 1990, President George H. W. Bush awarded Atanasoff the United States National Medal of Technology. He has been awarded a number of other distinctions as well. Among these are included:

Atanasoff Nunatak peak on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named for Atanasoff.

See also

References

  • Clark R. Mollenhoff, Atanasoff: Forgotten Father of the Computer 1988, ISBN 0-8138-0032-3; (Mollenhoff was a Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalist and lawyer)
  • Alice Burks and Arthur Burks, The First Electronic Computer: The Atanasoff Story, 1988, ISBN 0-472-10090-4
  • Arthur W Burks, Alice R Burks, in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, October, 1981; (an ENIAC engineer who gave credit to Atanasoff)
  • Allan R MackIntosh, "The First Electronic Computer", in Physics Today, March, 1987; (professor of physics at the University of Copenhagen acknowledges Atanasoff's precedence in a comprehensive article)
  • "The Computer Project at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory," web access restricted, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 51–67, April–June, 2001. (details Atanasoff's well-funded but unsuccessful second computer project in 1945–46)
  • Alice Burks, Who Invented The Computer?: The Legal Battle That Changed Computer History, 2003 , ISBN 1-59102-034-4

External links

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